| Literature DB >> 30456181 |
Samuel A Gold1, Vikram K Sabarwal2, Chirag Gordhan2, Graham R Hale3, Andrew Winer4.
Abstract
Pediatric renal and suprarenal cancers are relatively rare malignancies, but are not without significant consequence to both the patient and caretakers. These tumors are often found incidentally and present as large abdominal masses. Standard of care management involves surgical excision of the mass, but contemporary treatment guidelines advocate for use of neoadjuvant or adjuvant chemotherapy for advanced stage disease, such as those cases with lymph node involvement (LNI). However, LNI detection is based primarily on surgical pathology and performing extended lymph node dissection can add significant morbidity to a surgical case. In this review, we focus on the use and performance of imaging modalities to detect LNI in Wilms' tumor (WT), neuroblastoma, and pediatric renal cell carcinoma (RCC). We report on how imaging impacts management of these cases and the clinical implications of LNI. A literature search was conducted for studies published on imaging-based detection of LNI in pediatric renal and suprarenal cancers. Further review focused on surgical and medical management of those cases with suspected LNI. Current imaging protocols assisting in diagnosis and staging of pediatric renal and suprarenal cancers are generally limited to abdominal ultrasound and cross-sectional imaging, mainly computed tomography (CT). Recent research has investigated the role of more advance modalities, such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and positron emission tomography (PET), in the management of these malignancies. Special consideration must be made for pediatric patients who are more vulnerable to ionizing radiation and have characteristic imaging features different from adult controls. Management of pediatric renal and suprarenal cancers is influenced by LNI, but the rarity of these conditions has limited the volume of clinical research regarding imaging-based staging. As such, standardized criteria for LNI on imaging are lacking. Nevertheless, advanced imaging modalities are being investigated and potentially represent more accurate and safer options.Entities:
Keywords: Imaging; lymph nodes; pediatric; tumors
Year: 2018 PMID: 30456181 PMCID: PMC6212619 DOI: 10.21037/tau.2018.07.21
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Androl Urol ISSN: 2223-4683
Staging criteria for selected pediatric renal and suprarenal cancers
| Stage | Wilms’ tumor | Neuroblastoma | Renal cell carcinoma† |
|---|---|---|---|
| I | Confined to kidney & completely excised | Localized tumor; complete gross excision | (I) Tumor <4 cm; limited to kidney; |
| (II) Tumor 4–7 cm; limited to kidney | |||
| II | Tumor outside kidney but completely excised; local tumor spillage during surgery; nodes negative | (I) Localized tumor; incomplete excision; ipsilateral nonadherent nodes negative; | (I) Tumor 7–10 cm; limited to kidney |
| (II) Localized tumor; ± complete excision; ipsilateral nonadherent nodes positive | (II) Tumor >10 cm; limited to kidney | ||
| III | Non-hematogenous disease confined to abdomen; diffuse tumor spillage; perioperative renal capsule rupture; incompletely excised; nodes positive | Unresectable unilateral tumor crossing midline ± regional nodes positive; or localized unilateral tumor with contralateral nodes positive | (I) Tumor invades renal vasculature; or invaded perirenal sinus fat; does not extend beyond Gerota’s fascia; |
| (II) Tumor invades vena cava below diaphragm; | |||
| (III) Tumor invades vena cava above diaphragm or vena cava wall | |||
| IV | Hematogenous metastases | (I) Dissemination to distant lymph nodes, lungs, liver, skin, marrow, etc.; | Tumor invades beyond Gerota’s fascia; invades adrenal gland |
| (II) Localized tumor with dissemination to skin, liver, or marrow (infants <1 year) | |||
| V | Bilateral renal involvement | – | – |
†, nodal status for pediatric renal cell carcinoma defined as regional nodal involvement (N1) as part of TNM staging.